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Abstract
We evaluated the
feasibility of an automated tablet computer application providing a
family and personal history based cancer risk assessment for hereditary
breast, ovarian, endometrial and colorectal cancers. 1,002 women
presenting for screening mammography and 1,000 presenting for ultrasound
were offered screening. The application calculated the risk of BRCA
mutations using BRCAPRO, Myriad and Tyrer–Cuzick risk assessment models.
Lifetime risk of breast and ovarian cancer was assessed with the
BRCAPRO, Claus and Tyrer–Cuzick models. Colorectal and endometrial
cancer risk was calculated via the MMRpro model. Patients were
identified as high-risk based on thresholds 10 % or greater risk for
carrying genetic mutations or 20 % or greater lifetime risk of breast or
ovarian cancer. The percent of women found to be high-risk by a single
risk assessment tool ranged from 0.5 to 5.3 %. Combining assessment
tools found 9.3 % of women to be high-risk. The risk assessments
performed similarly for the mammography and ultrasound cohorts with
yields (combining assessment tools) of 9.2 and 9.4 % respectively. The
average ages of all the high-risk women were 45.8 and 39.6 years for the
mammography and ultrasound cohorts respectively. Difficulties
encountered included a need for software upgrade, wireless network
unreliability and hardware theft. Automated family history screening can
identify women probably at high-risk for hereditary cancers
efficiently. The number of women identified is increased by employing
multiple risk assessment models simultaneously. Surveying women in
conjunction with ultrasound identified women at increased risk as
effectively and at a younger age than with screening mammography.
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